On the Edge: Being Intelligent in an Unintelligent World
A Philosophical Manifesto I have spent much of my life observing the quiet tension between intelligence and the world that surrounds it. Not the performative kind of intelligence—reciting facts, collecting credentials, or signaling cleverness—but the deeper, structural sort that shapes how one perceives existence itself. Intelligence, as I understand and experience it, is not a badge to be worn or a performance to be staged. It is a mode of being, a way of inhabiting the world that is as natural as breathing, and just as involuntary. It is not something I do; it is something I am. And because of that, it often places me at the margins—on the edge—of a society that does not quite know what to make of such a disposition. Statistical Exceptionalism and the Quiet Reality of Difference To begin with, intelligence is a statistical exception. I do not say this with pride or with any desire to elevate myself above others; it is simply a fact of distribution. An IQ above 130 places one in a min...